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Teresa of Ávila

Teresa of Ávila, OCD (born Teresa Sánchez de Cepeda y Ahumada; 28 March 1515 – 4 or 15 October 1582),[a] also called Saint Teresa of Jesus, was a Spanish Carmelite nun and prominent Spanish mystic and religious reformer.


Teresa of Ávila

Saint Teresa of Ávila by Eduardo Balaca
Virgin, Doctor of the Church
BornTeresa Sánchez de Cepeda y Ahumada
28 March 1515
Ávila, Crown of Castile (today Spain)
Died4 October 1582(1582-10-04) (aged 67)
Alba de Tormes, Salamanca, Crown of Castile (today Spain)
Theology career
Notable work
Theological work
EraCatholic Reformation
Tradition or movementChristian mysticism
Main interestsTheology
Notable ideasMental prayer, Prayer of Quiet
Venerated in
Beatified24 April 1614, Rome by Pope Paul V
Canonized12 March 1622, Rome by Pope Gregory XV
Major shrineConvent of the Annunciation, Alba de Tormes, Spain
Feast15 October
AttributesCarmelite religious habit, biretta, quill, dove (as an attribute of the Holy Spirit), heart with a christogram
PatronageSpain, sick people, people in religious orders, people ridiculed for their piety, lacemakers, Požega, Croatia, Talisay City, Cebu, Philippines
ControversyHer reforms met with determined opposition and interest from the Spanish Inquisition, but no charges were laid against her. Her order split as a result.

Active during the Counter-Reformation, Teresa became the central figure of a movement of spiritual and monastic renewal, reforming the Carmelite Orders of both women and men.[2] The movement was later joined by the younger Spanish Carmelite friar and mystic John of the Cross, with whom she established the Discalced Carmelites. A formal papal decree adopting the split from the old order was issued in 1580.[web 3]

Her autobiography, The Life of Teresa of Jesus, The Interior Castle, and The Way of Perfection, are prominent works on Christian mysticism and Christian meditation practice. In her autobiography, written as a defense of her ecstatic mystical experiences, she discerns four stages in the ascent of the soul to God: mental prayer and meditation; the prayer of quiet; absorption-in-God; ecstatic consciousness.

Forty years after her death, in 1622, Teresa was canonized by Pope Gregory XV. On 27 September 1970 Pope Paul VI proclaimed Teresa the first female Doctor of the Church in recognition of her centuries-long spiritual legacy to Catholicism.[3][web 4]

Biography

Early life

Teresa Sánchez de Cepeda y Ahumada was born in 1515 in Ávila, Spain. Her paternal grandfather, Juan Sánchez de Toledo, was a marrano or converso, a Jew forced to convert to Christianity or emigrate. When Teresa's father was a child, Juan was condemned by the Spanish Inquisition for allegedly returning to Judaism, but he was later able to assume a Catholic identity.[4] Her father, Alonso Sánchez de Cepeda, was a successful wool merchant and one of the wealthiest men in Ávila. He bought a knighthood and assimilated successfully into Christian society.

 
Teresa of Ávila elopes to travel to Africa by Arnold van Westerhout

Previously married to Catalina del Peso y Henao, with whom he had three children, in 1509, Sánchez de Cepeda married Teresa's mother, Beatriz de Ahumada y Cuevas, in Gotarrendura.[5]

Teresa's mother brought her up as a dedicated Christian. Fascinated by accounts of the lives of the saints, she ran away from home at age seven, with her brother Rodrigo, to seek martyrdom in the fight against the Moors. Her uncle brought them home, when he spotted them just outside the town walls.[6]

When Teresa was eleven years old, her mother died, leaving her grief-stricken. This prompted her to embrace a deeper devotion to the Virgin Mary as her spiritual mother. Teresa was also enamored of popular fiction, which at the time consisted primarily of medieval tales of knighthood and works about fashion, gardens and flowers.[7][web 5] Teresa was sent to the Augustinian nuns' school at Ávila.[8]

Religious life

Ascetic and mystical practice

After completing her education, she initially resisted the idea of a religious vocation, but after a stay with her uncle and other relatives, she relented. In 1534, aged 20,[9] much to the disappointment of her pious and austere father, she decided to enter the local easy-going Carmelite Convent of the Incarnation, significantly built on top of land that had been used previously as a burial ground for Jews. She took up religious reading on contemplative prayer, especially Osuna's Abecedario espiritual ("Third Spiritual Alphabet," 1527), a guide on examination of conscience and "spiritual self-concentration and inner contemplation, known in mystical nomenclature as oratio recollectionis."[10] She also dipped into other mystical ascetical works such as the Tractatus de oratione et meditatione of Peter of Alcantara.[10]

Her zeal for mortification caused her to become ill again and she spent almost a year in bed, causing huge worry to her community and family. She nearly died but she recovered, attributing her recovery to the miraculous intercession of Saint Joseph. She began to experience bouts of religious ecstasy.[5] She reported that, during her illness, she had progressed from the lowest stage of "recollection", to the "devotions of silence" and even to the "devotions of ecstasy", which was one of perceived "perfect union with God" (see § Mysticism). She said she frequently experienced the rich "blessing of tears" during this final stage. As the Catholic distinction between mortal and venial sin became clear to her, she came to understand the awful horror of sin and the inherent nature of original sin. She also became conscious of her own natural impotence in confronting sin and the need for absolute surrender to God.[citation needed]

Around the same time, she received a copy of the full Spanish translation of Augustine of Hippo's autobiographical work Confessions, which helped her resolve and to tend to her own bouts of religious scruples. The text helped her realize that holiness was indeed possible and she found solace in the idea that such a great saint was once an inveterate sinner. In her autobiography, she wrote that she "was very fond of St. Augustine [...] for he was a sinner too."[11]

Transverberation

Around 1556, friends suggested that her newfound knowledge could be of diabolical and not of divine origin. She had begun to inflict mortifications of the flesh upon herself. But her confessor, the Jesuit Francis Borgia, reassured her of the divine inspiration of her thoughts. On St. Peter's Day in 1559, Teresa became firmly convinced that Jesus Christ had presented himself to her in bodily form, though invisible. These visions lasted almost uninterruptedly for more than two years. In another vision, the famous transverberation, a seraph drove the fiery point of a golden lance repeatedly through her heart, causing her an ineffable spiritual and bodily pain:

I saw in his hand a long spear of gold, and at the point there seemed to be a little fire. He appeared to me to be thrusting it at times into my heart, and to pierce my very entrails; when he drew it out, he seemed to draw them out also, and to leave me all on fire with a great love of God. The pain was so great, that it made me moan; and yet so surpassing was the sweetness of this excessive pain, that I could not wish to be rid of it ...[b]

The account of this vision was the inspiration for one of Bernini's most famous works, the Ecstasy of Saint Teresa at Santa Maria della Vittoria in Rome. Although based in part on Teresa's description of her mystical transverberation in her autobiography, Bernini's depiction of the event is considered by some to be highly eroticized, especially when compared to the entire preceding artistic Teresian tradition.[c]

The memory of this episode served as an inspiration throughout the rest of her life, and motivated her lifelong imitation of the life and suffering of Jesus, epitomized in the adage often associated with her: "Lord, either let me suffer or let me die."[12]

Teresa, who became a celebrity in her town dispensing wisdom from behind the convent grille, was known for her raptures, which sometimes involved levitation. It was a source of embarrassment to her and she bade her sisters hold her down when this occurred. Subsequently, historians, neurologists and psychiatrists like Peter Fenwick and Javier Álvarez-Rodríguez, among others, have taken an interest in her symptomatology. The fact that she wrote down virtually everything that happened to her during her religious life means that an invaluable and exceedingly rare medical record from the 16th century has been preserved. Examination of this record has led to the speculative conclusion that she may have suffered from temporal lobe epilepsy.[13][14]

Monastic reformer

Over time, Teresa found herself increasingly at odds with the spiritual malaise prevailing in her convent of the Incarnation. Among the 150 nuns living there, the observance of cloister, designed to protect and strengthen spiritual practice and prayer, became so lax that it appeared to lose its purpose. The daily invasion of visitors, many of high social and political rank, disturbed the atmosphere with frivolous concerns and vacuous conversation. Such intrusions in the solitude essential to develop and sustain contemplative prayer so grieved Teresa that she longed to intervene.[web 6]

The incentive to take the practical steps inspired by her inward motivation was supported by the Franciscan priest, Peter of Alcantara, who met her early in 1560 and became her spiritual adviser. She resolved to found a "reformed" Carmelite convent, correcting the laxity which she had found at the Incarnation convent and elsewhere besides. Guimara de Ulloa, a woman of wealth and a friend, supplied the funds for the project.[citation needed]

The abject poverty of the new convent, established in 1562 and named St. Joseph's (San José), at first caused a scandal among the citizens and authorities of Ávila, and the small house with its chapel was in peril of suppression. However, powerful patrons, including the local bishop, coupled with the impression of well ordered subsistence and purpose, turned animosity into approval.[citation needed]

In March 1563, after Teresa had moved to the new convent house, she received papal sanction for her primary principles of absolute poverty and renunciation of ownership of property, which she proceeded to formulate into a "constitution". Her plan was the revival of the earlier, stricter monastic rules, supplemented by new regulations including the three disciplines of ceremonial flagellation prescribed for the Divine Office every week, and the discalceation of the religious. For the first five years, Teresa remained in seclusion, mostly engaged in prayer and writing.[citation needed]

 
Church window at the Convent of St Teresa

Extended travels

In 1567, Teresa received a patent from the Carmelite General, Rubeo de Ravenna, to establish further houses of the new order. This process required many visitations and long journeys across nearly all the provinces of Spain. She left a record of the arduous project in her Libro de las Fundaciones. Between 1567 and 1571, reformed convents were established at Medina del Campo, Malagón, Valladolid, Toledo, Pastrana, Salamanca, and Alba de Tormes.

As part of the original patent, Teresa was given permission to set up two houses for men who wished to adopt the reforms. She convinced two Carmelite friars, John of the Cross and Anthony of Jesus to help with this. They founded the first monastery of Discalced Carmelite brothers in November 1568 at Duruelo. Another friend of Teresa, Jerónimo Gracián, the Carmelite visitator of the older observance of Andalusia and apostolic commissioner, and later provincial of the Teresian order, gave her powerful support in founding monasteries at Segovia (1571), Beas de Segura (1574), Seville (1575), and Caravaca de la Cruz (Murcia, 1576). Meanwhile, John of the Cross promoted the inner life of the movement through his power as a teacher and preacher.[15]

Opposition to reforms

In 1576, unreformed members of the Carmelite order began to persecute Teresa, her supporters and her reforms. Following a number of resolutions adopted at the general chapter at Piacenza, the governing body of the order forbade all further founding of reformed convents. The general chapter instructed her to go into "voluntary" retirement at one of her institutions.[15] She obeyed and chose St. Joseph's at Toledo. Meanwhile, her friends and associates were subjected to further attacks.[15]

Several years later, her appeals by letter to King Philip II of Spain secured relief. As a result, in 1579, the cases before the inquisition against her, Gracián and others, were dropped.[15] This allowed the reform to resume. An edict from Pope Gregory XIII allowed the appointment of a special provincial for the newer branch of the Carmelite religious, and a royal decree created a "protective" board of four assessors for the reform.[15]

During the last three years of her life, Teresa founded convents at Villanueva de la Jara in northern Andalusia (1580), Palencia (1580), Soria (1581), Burgos, and Granada (1582). In total, seventeen convents, all but one founded by her, and as many men's monasteries, were owed to her reforms over twenty years.[16]

Last days

Her final illness overtook her on one of her journeys from Burgos to Alba de Tormes. She died in 1582, just as Catholic Europe was making the switch from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar, which required the excision of the dates of 5–14 October from the calendar. She died either before midnight of 4 October or early in the morning of 15 October, which is celebrated as her feast day. According to the liturgical calendar then in use, she died on the 15th. Her last words were: "My Lord, it is time to move on. Well then, may your will be done. O my Lord and my Spouse, the hour that I have longed for has come. It is time to meet one another."[17]

 
Avila, Saint Theresa's statue

After her death

Holy relics

She was buried at the Convento de la Anunciación in Alba de Tormes. Nine months after her death the coffin was opened and her body was found to be intact but the clothing had rotted. Before the body was re-interred one of her hands was cut off, wrapped in a scarf and sent to Ávila. Gracián cut the little finger off the hand and – according to his own account – kept it with him until it was taken by the occupying Ottoman Turks, from whom he had to redeem it with a few rings and 20 reales. The body was exhumed again on 25 November 1585 to be moved to Ávila and found to be incorrupt. An arm was removed and left in Alba de Tormes at the nuns' request, to compensate for losing the main relic of Teresa, but the rest of the body was reburied in the Discalced Carmelite chapter house in Ávila. The removal was done without the approval of the Duke of Alba de Tormes and he brought the body back in 1586, with Pope Sixtus V ordering that it remain in Alba de Tormes on pain of excommunication. A grander tomb on the original site was raised in 1598 and the body was moved to a new chapel in 1616.

The body still remains there, except for the following parts:

  • Rome – right foot and part of the upper jaw
  • Lisbon – hand
  • Ronda, Spain – left eye and left hand (the latter was kept by Francisco Franco until his death after Francoist troops captured it from Republican troops during the Spanish Civil War)
  • Museum of the Church of the Annunciation, Alba de Tormes – left arm and heart
  • Church of Our Lady of Loreto, Paris, France – one finger
  • Sanlúcar de Barrameda – one finger

Canonization

 
Statue of Saint Teresa of Ávila in Mafra National Palace, Mafra

In 1622, forty years after her death, she was canonized by Pope Gregory XV. The Cortes exalted her to patroness of Spain in 1627. The University of Salamanca had granted her the title Doctor ecclesiae (Latin for "Doctor of the Church") with a diploma in her lifetime,[dubious ] but that title is distinct from the papal honour of Doctor of the Church, which is always conferred posthumously. The latter was finally bestowed upon her by Pope Paul VI on 27 September 1970,[3] along with Catherine of Siena,[18] making them the first women to be awarded the distinction. Teresa is revered as the Doctor of Prayer. The mysticism in her works exerted a formative influence upon many theologians of the following centuries, such as Francis of Sales, Fénelon, and the Port-Royalists. In 1670, her coffin was plated in silver.

Teresa of Avila is honored in the Church of England and in the Episcopal Church on 15 October.[web 7][1]

Patron saint

In 1626, at the request of Philip IV of Spain, the Castilian parliament[d] elected Teresa "without lacking one vote" as copatron saint of Castile.[19] This status was affirmed by Pope Urban VIII in a brief issued on 21 July 1627 in which he stated:

For these reasons [the king's and Cortes's elections] and for the great devotion which they have for Teresa, they elected her for patron and advocate of these kingdoms in the last Cortes of the aforementioned kingdoms .... And because ... the representatives in the Cortes desired it so greatly that their vote be firm and perpetual, we grant it our patronage and the approval of the Holy Apostolic See.

— Rowe 2011, pp. 77–78

More broadly, the 1620s, the entirety of Spain (Castile and beyond) debated who should be the country's patron saint; the choices were either the current patron, James Matamoros, or a pairing of him and the newly canonised Saint Teresa of Ávila. Teresa's promoters said Spain faced newer challenges, especially the threat of Protestantism and societal decline at home, thus needing a more contemporary patron who understood those issues and could guide the Spanish nation. Santiago's supporters (Santiaguistas) fought back and eventually won the argument, but Teresa of Ávila remained far more popular at the local level.[20][page needed] James the Great kept the title of patron saint for the Spanish people, and the most Blessed Virgin Mary under the title Immaculate Conception as the sole patroness for the entire Spanish Kingdom.

Legacy regarding the Infant Jesus of Prague

 
"It is love alone that gives worth to all things."

The Spanish nuns who established Carmel in France brought a devotion to the Infant Jesus with them, and it became widespread in France.[21][web 8]

Though there are no written historical accounts establishing that Teresa of Ávila ever owned the famous Infant Jesus of Prague statue, according to tradition, such a statue is said to have been in her possession and Teresa is reputed to have given it to a noblewoman travelling to Prague.[22][web 9][web 10][web 11] The age of the statue dates to approximately the same time as Teresa. It has been thought that Teresa carried a portable statue of the Child Jesus wherever she went; the idea circulated by the early 1700s.[23][page needed]

Writings

 
This is the one portrait of Teresa that is probably the most true to her appearance. It is a copy of an original 1576 painting of her when she was 61.

Autobiography

The autobiography, La Vida de la Santa Madre Teresa de Jesús (The Life of the Holy Mother Teresa of Jesus) was written between composed at Avila between 1562 and 1565, but published posthumously.[24] Editions include:

  • The Life of St. Teresa of Jesus ... Written by Herself. Translated from the Spanish by D. Lewis, 1870. London: Burns, Oates, & Co
  • The Autobiography, written before 1567, under the direction of her confessor, Fr. Pedro Ibáñez, 1882
  • The Life Of Saint Teresa Of Avila By Herself. J.M. Cohen, 1957. Penguin Classics
  • Life of St. Teresa of Jesus. Translated by Benedict Zimmerman, 1997. Tan Books, ISBN 978-0-89555-603-5
  • The Life of Teresa of Jesus: The Autobiography of Teresa of Avila. Translated by E. Allison Peers, 1991. Doubleday, ISBN 978-0-385-01109-9
  • The Book of Her Life, translated, with notes, by Kieran Kavanaugh, OCD and Otilio Rodriguez, OCD, 2008. Introduction by Jodi Bilinkoff. Indianapolis/Cambridge: Hackett Publishing Company, ISBN 978-0-87220-907-7
  • The Book of My Life. Mirabai Starr, 2008. Boston, Massachusetts: Shambhala Publications, ISBN 978-1-59030-573-7

The Way of Perfection

The Way of Perfection (Spanish: Camino de Perfección) was published in 1566. Teresa called this a "living book" and in it set out to teach her nuns how to progress through prayer and Christian meditation. She discusses the rationale for being a Carmelite, and the rest deals with the purpose of and approaches to spiritual life. The title was inspired by the devotional book The Imitation of Christ (1418) which had become a favourite expression of Teresa much before she wrote this work, as it appeared at several places in her autobiography, The Life of Teresa of Jesus. Like her other books, The Way of Perfection was written on the advice of her counsellors to describe her experiences in prayer during the period when the Reformation was spreading through Europe. Herein she describes ways of attaining spiritual perfection through prayer and its four stages, as in meditation, quiet, repose of soul and finally perfect union with God, which she equates with rapture.

Editions

Interior Castle

The Interior Castle, or The Mansions, (Spanish: El Castillo Interior or Las Moradas) was written in 1577, and published in 1588.[25][26] It contained the basis for what she felt should be the ideal journey of faith, comparing the contemplative soul to a castle with seven successive interior courts, or chambers, analogous to the seven mansions. The work was inspired by her vision of the soul as a diamond in the shape of a castle containing seven mansions, which she interpreted as the journey of faith through seven stages, ending with union with God.[27] Fray Diego, one of Teresa's former confessors wrote that God revealed to Teresa:

...a most beautiful crystal globe, made in the shape of a castle, and containing seven mansions, in the seventh and innermost of which was the King of Glory, in the greatest splendour, illumining and beautifying them all. The nearer one got to the centre, the stronger was the light; outside the palace limits everything was foul, dark and infested with toads, vipers and other venomous creatures."[28]

Christia Mercer, Columbia University philosophy professor, claims that the seventeenth-century Frenchman René Descartes lifted some of his most influential ideas from Teresa of Ávila, who, fifty years before Descartes, wrote popular books about the role of philosophical reflection in intellectual growth.[29] She describes a number of striking similarities between Descartes's seminal work Meditations on First Philosophy and Teresa's Interior Castle.[web 12]

Translations

  • The first English translation was published in 1675.
  • Fr. John Dalton (1852). John Dalton’s translation of The Interior Castle contains an interesting preface and translations of other letters by St. Teresa.
  • Benedictines of Stanbrook, edited by Fr. Zimmerman (1921). The translation of The Interior Castle by the Benedictines of Stanbrook also has an excellent introduction and includes many cross-references to other works by St. Teresa.
  • E. Allison Peers (1946). E. Allison Peers’ translation of The Interior Castle is another popular public domain version translated by a professor and scholar of Hispanic studies.
  • Fr. Kieran Kavanaugh (1979). This translation also stays true to the text and contains many useful cross-references. An updated study edition contains comprehensive notes, reflection questions and a glossary.
  • The Interior Castle – The Mansions, TAN Books, 1997. ISBN 978-0-89555-604-2
  • Mirabai Starr (2004). Described as "free of religious dogma, this modern translation renders St. Teresa's work a beautiful and practical set of teachings for seekers of all faiths in need of spiritual guidance." Starr’s interpretive version of The Interior Castle eliminates Teresa’s use of words such as “sin”, which results in a translation which is more paraphrased than accurate translation.
  • The Interior Castle - Modern update of the spiritual guide by Teresa of Avila. by M.B. Anderson, Root Classics (publisher), 2022. ISBN 978-1-956314-01-4.[e]

In popular culture

St. Teresa's mystical experiences have inspired several authors in modern times, but not necessarily from Teresa's Christian theological perspective.

The 2006 book Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert recognizes St. Teresa as "that most mystical of Catholic figures" and alludes to St. Teresa's Interior Castle as the "mansions of her being" and her journey as one of "divine meditative bliss". Gilbert was raised a Protestant Christian, but her book describes her path to God through yoga.[30]

  • The 2007 book by American spiritual author Caroline Myss Entering the Castle was inspired by St. Teresa's Interior Castle, but still has a New Age approach to mysticism.[31][32]
  • St. Teresa also inspired American author R. A. Lafferty in his novel Fourth Mansions (1969), which was nominated for the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1970.
  • Brooke Fraser's song "Orphans, Kingdoms" was inspired by St. Teresa's Interior Castle.
  • Jean Stafford's short story 'The Interior Castle' relates the intense preoccupation of an accident victim with her own brain, which she sees variously as a jewel, a flower, a light in a glass and a set of envelopes within envelopes.
  • Jeffrey Eugenides' 2011 novel The Marriage Plot refers to St. Teresa's Interior Castle when recounting the religious experience of Mitchell Grammaticus, one of the main characters of the book.
  • Teen Daze's [33] 2012 release "The Inner Mansions" refers to St. Teresa's Interior Castle in the album's title as well as in the first track. "...have mercy on yourselves! If you realize your pitiable condition, how can you refrain from trying to remove the darkness from the crystal of your souls? Remember, if death should take you now, you would never again enjoy the light of this Sun."[34] This line appears dubbed over the musical introduction to "New Life."[35]
  • In Mark Williamson's "ONE: a memoir" (2018), the metaphor of the Interior Castle is used to describe an inner world of introspective reflection on past events, a set of "memory loci" based on the ancient system of recall for rhetorical purposes.

Other

  • Relaciones (Relationships), an extension of the autobiography giving her inner and outer experiences in epistolary form.
  • Her rare poems ("Todas las poesías", Munster, 1854) are distinguished for tenderness of feeling and rhythm of thought.
  • The Complete Poetry of St. Teresa of Avila. A Bilingual Edition – Edición y traducción de Eric W. Vogt. New Orleans University Press of the South, 1996. Second edition, 2015. xl, 116 p. ISBN 978-1-937030-52-0
  • "Meditations on Song of Songs", 1567, written nominally for her daughters at the convent of Our Lady of Mount Carmel.
  • Conceptos del Amor ("Concepts of Love") and
  • Exclamaciones.
  • Las Cartas (Saragossa, 1671), or her correspondence, of which there are 342 extant letters and 87 fragments of others. The first edition of Teresa's letters was published in 1658 with the comment of Juan de Palafox y Mendoza, Roman Catholic bishop of Osma and an opponent to the Company of Jesus.[36]
  • The Complete Works of St Teresa of Jesus, in five volumes, translated and edited by E. Allison Peers, including 2 volumes of correspondence. London: Sheed and Ward, 1982.

Mysticism

The prayer Nada te turbe (Let nothing disturb you) is attributed to Teresa, having been found within her breviary:[web 13]

Let nothing disturb you.
Let nothing make you afraid.
All things are passing.
God alone never changes.
Patience gains all things.
If you have God you will want for nothing.
God alone suffices.Kirvan 1996

— Teresa of Ávila

The ultimate preoccupation of Teresa's mystical thought, as consistently reflected in her writings, is the ascent of the soul to God. Aumann notes that "the grades of prayer described in The Life do not correspond to the division of prayer commonly given in the manuals of spiritual life," due to the fact that "St. Teresa did not write a systematic theology of prayer."[37] According to Zimmerman, "In all her writings on this subject she deals with her personal experiences [...] there is no vestige in her writings of any influence of the Areopagite, the Patristic, or the Scholastic Mystical schools, as represented among others, by the German Dominican Mystics. She is intensely personal, her system going exactly as far as her experiences, but not a step further."[38]

Teresa describes in the Interior Castle that the treasure of heaven lies buried within our hearts, and that there is an interior part of the heart which is the centre of the soul.[12]

Four stages as described in the autobiography

In her autobiography she describes four stages,[39] in which she uses the image of watering one's garden as a metaphor for mystical prayer:[f]

  • The first, Devotion of the Heart, consists of mental prayer and meditation. It means the withdrawal of the soul from without, penitence and especially the devout meditation on the passion of Christ (Autobiography 11.20).
  • The second, Devotion of Peace, is where human will is surrendered to God. This occurs by virtue of an uplifted awareness granted by God, while other faculties, such as memory, reason, and imagination, are not yet safe from worldly distraction. Although a partial distraction can happen, due to outer activity such as repetition of prayers or writing down spiritual things, the prevailing state is one of quietude (Autobiography 14.1).
  • The third, Devotion of Union, concerns the absorption-in-God. It is not only a heightened, but essentially, an ecstatic state. At this level, reason is also surrendered to God, and only the memory and imagination are left to ramble. This state is characterized by a blissful peace, a sweet slumber of at least the higher soul faculties, that is a consciousness of being enraptured by the love of God.
  • The fourth, Devotion of Ecstasy, is where the consciousness of being in the body disappears. Sensory faculties cease to operate. Memory and imagination also become absorbed in God, as though intoxicated. Body and spirit dwell in the throes of exquisite pain, alternating between a fearful fiery glow, in complete unconscious helplessness, and periods of apparent strangulation. Sometimes such ecstatic transports literally cause the body to be lifted into space.[40] This state may last as long as half an hour and tends to be followed by relaxation of a few hours of swoon-like weakness, attended by the absence of all faculties while in union with God. The subject awakens from this trance state in tears. It may be regarded as the culmination of mystical experience. Indeed, Teresa was said to have been observed levitating during Mass on more than one occasion.[40]

The seven mansions of the Interior castle

The Interior Castle is divided into seven mansions (also called dwelling places), each level describing a step to get closer to God. In her work, Teresa already assumed entrance into the first mansions by prayer and meditation.

The purgative stage, involving active prayer and asceticism:[web 14]

  • The first mansion begin with a soul's state of grace, but the souls are surrounded by sin and only starting to seek God's grace through humility in order to achieve perfection.
  • The second mansions are also called the Mansion of the Practice of Prayer because the soul seeks to advance through the castle by daily thoughts of God, humble recognition of God's work in the soul and ultimately daily prayer.
  • The third mansions are the Mansions of Exemplary Life characterized through divine grace and a love for God that is so great that the soul has an aversion to both mortal and venial sin and a desire to do works of charitable service to man for the ultimate glory of God. The prayer of acquired recollection belongs to the third mansion.[41]

The illuminative stage, the beginning of mystical or contemplative or supernatural prayer:[web 14]

  • The fourth mansions are a departure from the soul actively acquiring what it gains as God increases his role. In this mansion, the soul begins to experience two types of supernatural prayer, namely the Prayer of Supernatural (or passive) Recollection and The Prayer of Quiet;[web 14]
  • The fifth mansion is The Prayer of Union, in which the soul prepares itself to receive gifts from God;

Unitive stage:[web 14]

  • The sixth mansion is the betrothal (engagement) of the soul with God can be compared to lovers. The soul spends increasing amounts of time torn between favors from God and from outside afflictions.
  • The seventh mansion is the spiritual marriage with God, in which the soul achieves clarity in prayer

Some scholars have compared the seven mansions to the seven chakras in Hindu culture.[42]

Nine grades of prayer

Overview

The first four grades of Teresa's classifications of prayer belong to the ascetical stage of spiritual life. These are vocal prayer, meditational or mental prayer, affective prayer, and acquired or natural recollection.[43][44][web 15]

According to Augustin Poulain and Robert Thouless, Teresa described four degrees or stages of mystical union, namely the prayer of quiet, full or semi-ecstatic union, ecstatic union or ecstasy, and transforming or deifying union, or spiritual marriage (properly) of the soul with God.[43][45] TWhile Augustin Poulain and Robert Thouless don't mention the Prayer of Supernatural (or passive) Recollection as a separate stage,[43][45] Aumann discerns infused contemplation as a separate stage in the fourth mansion of the Interior Castle.[44][web 15] Together, these "five grades are infused prayer and belong to the mystical phase of spiritual life."[44][web 15]

Thomas Merton disagrees on a fine-cut distinction between acquired contemplation and the prayer of quiet, noticing the Carmelite tendency of systematization, whereas Teresa herself was just describing her personal experiences.[46] Commenting on Teresa's writings and the scholarly discussions on the precise stages, Thomas Merton comments: "with all these divisions and distinctions, comings and goings and varieties of terms, one tends to become impatient with the saint."[47]

Aumann synthesizes Teresa's writings into nine grades of prayer:[44][48][web 15]

Threefold classification The Life Interior Castle Nine grades
Ascetic Devotion of the Heart First mansions 1. vocal prayer
2. mental prayer or prayer of meditation
3. affective prayer
Second and third mansions 4. prayer of simplicity, or acquired contemplation or recollection
Illuminative Devotion of Peace Fourth mansions 5. infused contemplation or recollection
6. prayer of quiet
Unitive Devotion of Union Fifth mansions 7. prayer of (simple) union
Devotion of Ecstacy Sixth mansions 8. prayer of conforming or ecstatic union
Seventh mansions 9. prayer of transforming union.

Ordinary prayer or ascetical stage

Mental or meditational prayer

Mental prayer is a form of prayer "performed without aid of any particular formula."[49] It is distinguished from vocal prayers, "prayers performed by means of a given formula,"[49] Prayer is mental when the thoughts and affections of the soul are not expressed in a previously determined formula.[web 16] According to Teresa of Ávila, mental prayer is meditational prayer, in which the person is like a gardener, who, with much labour, draws the water up from the depths of the well to water the plants and flowers.[50][51] According to Teresa of Avila, mental prayer can proceed by using vocal prayers in order to improve dialogue with God.[52] According to Lehodey, mental prayer can be divided into meditation, more active in reflections, and contemplation, more quiet and gazeful.[53]

Natural or acquired contemplation - prayer of simplicity

For Teresa of Avila, in natural or acquired contemplation, also called the prayer of simplicity[g] there is one dominant thought or sentiment which recurs constantly and easily (although with little or no development) amid many other thoughts, beneficial or otherwise. The prayer of simplicity often has a tendency to simplify itself even in respect to its object, leading one to think chiefly of God and of his presence, but in a confused manner.[43]

In the words of Saint Alphonsus Maria de Liguori, acquired contemplation "consists in seeing at a simple glance the truths which could previously be discovered only through prolonged discourse": reasoning is largely replaced by intuition and affections and resolutions, though not absent, are only slightly varied and expressed in a few words. Similarly, Saint Ignatius of Loyola, in his 30-day retreat or Spiritual Exercises beginning in the "second week" with its focus on the life of Jesus, describes less reflection and more simple contemplation on the events of Jesus' life. These contemplations consist mainly in a simple gaze and include an "application of the senses" to the events,[55]: 121  to further one's empathy for Jesus' values, "to love him more and to follow him more closely."[55]: 104 

Definitions similar to that of Saint Alphonsus Maria de Liguori are given by Adolphe Tanquerey ("a simple gaze on God and divine things proceeding from love and tending thereto") and Saint Francis de Sales ("a loving, simple and permanent attentiveness of the mind to divine things").[56]

Natural or acquired contemplation has been compared to the attitude of a mother watching over the cradle of her child: she thinks lovingly of the child without reflection and amid interruptions. The Catechism of the Catholic Church states:

What is contemplative prayer? St. Teresa answers: 'Contemplative [sic][h] prayer [oración mental] in my opinion is nothing else than a close sharing between friends; it means taking time frequently to be alone with him who we know loves us.' Contemplative prayer seeks him 'whom my soul loves'. It is Jesus, and in him, the Father. We seek him, because to desire him is always the beginning of love, and we seek him in that pure faith which causes us to be born of him and to live in him. In this inner prayer we can still meditate, but our attention is fixed on the Lord himself.[60]

Infused or higher contemplation - mystical union

According to Hardon, infused contemplation is "A supernatural gift by which a person's mind and will become totally centered on God. Under this influence the intellect receives special insights into things of the spirit, and the affections are extraordinarily animated with divine love. Infused contemplation assumes the free co-operation of the human will."[61] According to Poulain, it is a form of mystical union with God, a union characterized by the fact that it is God, and God only, who manifests Himself.[43] According to Poulain, mystical grage may also manifestat as visions of the humanity of Christ or an angel or revelations of a future event, and include miraculous bodily phenomena sometimes observed in ecstatics.[43]

In Teresa's mysticism, infused contemplation is described as a "divinely originated, general, non-conceptual, loving awareness of God."[62] According to Dubay:

It is a wordless awareness and love that we of ourselves cannot initiate or prolong. The beginnings of this contemplation are brief and frequently interrupted by distractions. The reality is so unimposing that one who lacks instruction can fail to appreciate what exactly is taking place. Initial infused prayer is so ordinary and unspectacular in the early stages that many fail to recognize it for what it is. Yet with generous people, that is, with those who try to live the whole Gospel wholeheartedly and who engage in an earnest prayer life, it is common.[62]

According to Thomas Dubay, infused contemplation is the normal, ordinary development of discursive prayer (mental prayer, meditative prayer), which it gradually replaces.[62] Dubay considers infused contemplation as common only among "those who try to live the whole Gospel wholeheartedly and who engage in an earnest prayer life". Other writers view contemplative prayer in its infused supernatural form as far from common. John Baptist Scaramelli, reacting in the 17th century against quietism, taught that asceticism and mysticism are two distinct paths to perfection, the former being the normal, ordinary end of the Christian life, and the latter something extraordinary and very rare.[63] Jordan Aumann considered that this idea of the two paths was "an innovation in spiritual theology and a departure from the traditional Catholic teaching".[64] And Jacques Maritain proposed that one should not say that every mystic necessarily enjoys habitual infused contemplation in the mystical state, since the gifts of the Holy Spirit are not limited to intellectual operations.[65]

The Prayer of Quiet

For Teresa of Avila, the Prayer of Quiet is a state in which the soul experiences an extraordinary peace and rest, accompanied by delight or pleasure in contemplating God as present.[66][67][web 17][68] According to Poulain, "Mystical union will be called spiritual quiet when the Divine action is still too weak to prevent distractions: in a word, when the imagination still retains a certain liberty."[43] According to Poulain, in incomplete mystical union, or the prayer of quiet or supernatural recollection, the action of God is not strong enough to prevent distractions, and the imagination still retains a certain liberty.[43]

Full or semi-ecstatic union

According to Poulain, "Mystical union will be called [...] full union when its strength is so great that the soul is fully occupied with the Divine object, whilst, on the other hand, the senses continue to act (under these conditions, by making a greater or less effort, one can cease from prayer."[43]

Ecstatic union

According to Poulain, "Mystical union will be called [...] ecstasy when communications with the external world are severed or nearly so (in this event one can no longer make voluntary movement nor energy from the state at will)."[43]

Transforming union

The transforming union differs from the other three specifically and not merely in intensity. According to Poulain, "It consists in the habitual consciousness of a mysterious grace which all shall possess in heaven: the anticipation of the Divine nature. The soul is conscious of the Divine assistance in its superior supernatural operations, those of the intellect and the will. Spiritual marriage differs from spiritual espousals inasmuch as the first of these states is permanent and the second only transitory."[43]

Portrayals

Portrayals of Teresa include the following:

 
Detail of St. Theresa, 1827, by French painter François Gérard
 
Portrait of Sarah Bernhardt as Thérèse in La Vierge d'Avila by Catulle Mendès (1906)

Literature

Painting and sculpture

Drama and film

  • Hugh Ross Williamson wrote a play, Teresa of Avila, about her life, which premiered in London in 1961.
  • Performance artist Linda Montano has cited Teresa of Ávila as one of the most important influences on her work and since her return to Catholicism in the 2000s has done performances of her life.[80]
  • Teresa de Jesús (1984), directed by Josefina Molina and starring Concha Velasco, is a Spanish made-for-TV mini-series. In it Teresa is portrayed as the determined foundress of new carmelite houses while protecting the infant Jesus statue on her many arduous journeys. The devotion to the Child Jesus spread quickly in Spain, possibly due to her mystical reputation, and then to other places, including France.[web 22]
  • Nigel Wingrove's 1989 short film Visions of Ecstasy was based on Teresa of Ávila. The film features phantasied sexualised scenes of Teresa with the body of Jesus on the cross. It is the only work to be refused certification by the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) on the grounds of blasphemy.[web 23]
  • Dževad Karahasan. The Delighted Angel drama about Teresa of Ávila and Rabija al-Adavija, Vienna-Salzburg-Klagenfurt, ARBOS 1995.[citation needed]
  • Paz Vega stars as Teresa in Teresa, el cuerpo de Cristo, a 2007 Spanish biopic directed by Ray Loriga.[81]
  • Marian Álvarez plays the saint in Teresa, a 2015 Spanish television film directed by Jorge Dorado and made for the 500th anniversary of her birth.[web 24]
  • St. Teresa also features prominently in the 2009 Ron Howard film, Angels and Demons, where the Bernini sculpture, The Ecstasy of St. Teresa, is an important clue in helping Robert Langdon (Tom Hanks) find an anti-matter bomb that is hidden in and set to destroy the Vatican.

Music

See also

Notes

  1. ^ At some hour of the night between 4 October and 15 October 1582, the night of the transition in Spain from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar.
  2. ^ Teresa wrote that it must be a cherub (Deben ser los que llaman cherubines), but Fr. Domingo Báñez wrote in the margin that it seemed more like a seraph (mas parece de los que se llaman seraphis), an identification that most editors have followed. Santa Teresa de Ávila. "Libro de su vida". Escritos de Santa Teresa.
  3. ^ For the creation of the work and an analysis of its transgression of religious decorum, see Franco Mormando's article, Did Bernini's 'Ecstasy of St. Teresa' Cross a 17th-century Line of Decorum?[1]).
  4. ^ Rowe 2011, p. 47 refers to the Castilian Cortes as the "Castilian parliament"
  5. ^ Learn more about what was modified in the modern update of The Interior Castle.
  6. ^ See: The Autobiography Chs. 10–22
  7. ^ Catholic Dictionary: Prayer of simplicity: "Meditation replaced by a purer, more intimate prayer consisting in a simple regard or loving thought on God, or on one of his attributes, or on some mystery of the Christian faith. Reasoning is put aside and the soul peacefully attends to the operations of the Spirit with sentiments of love."[54]
  8. ^ Mental prayer, "oración mental," is not contemplative prayer.[57][58][59]

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  47. ^ Merton (2008), p. 241-242.
  48. ^ Aumann (1982).
  49. ^ a b Simler (2009).
  50. ^ Wynne (1911).
  51. ^ Lehodey (1912), p. 13.
  52. ^ Teresa of Ávila (2007), p. 141.
  53. ^ Lehodey (1912), p. 5.
  54. ^ Catholic Dictionary: Prayer of simplicity, Catholic Dictionary: Prayer of simplicity
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  59. ^ Wyhe (2008), p. 174.
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  65. ^ Aumann, Christian Spirituality in the Catholic Tradition, p. 276
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  71. ^ Lafferty 1999.
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  74. ^ Moore 1990, p. 25.
  75. ^ Graham 1999.
  76. ^ Findley 1999.
  77. ^ Sackville-West 2011.
  78. ^ "Saint Teresa of Avila's Vision of the Dove - Peter Paul Rubens (in 1612 - 1614)".
  79. ^ Jordanova 2012, pp. 79–94.
  80. ^ Knowles et al. 2002, pp. 18–34.
  81. ^ "Teresa, el cuerpo de Cristo". IMDb. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  82. ^ Park 2009, pp. 28–44.
  83. ^ Tommasini 1998.
  84. ^ Hontiveros 2016.

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Further reading

  • Carolyn A. Greene. Castles in the Sand fiction with cited sources about Teresa of Avila Lighthouse Trails Publishing, 2009. ISBN 978-0-9791315-4-7
  • Jean Abiven. 15 Days of Prayer with Saint Teresa of Avila, New City Press, 2011. ISBN 978-1-56548-366-8
  • Gould Levine, Linda; Engelson Marson, Ellen; Feiman Waldman, Gloria, eds. (1993). Spanish Women Writers: A Bio-Bibliographical Source Book. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-31326-823-6.
  • Bárbara Mujica, Teresa de Ávila: Lettered Woman, (Nashville, Vanderbilt University Press, 2009).
  • E. Rhodes, "Teresa de Jesus's Book and the Reform of the Religious Man in Sixteenth Century Spain," in Laurence Lux-Sterritt and Carmen Mangion (eds), Gender, Catholicism and Spirituality: Women and the Roman Catholic Church in Britain and Europe, 1200–1900 (Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 2011),
  • John Thomas, "Ecstasy, art & the body. St. Teresa of Avila's 'Transverberation', and its depiction in the sculpture of Gianlorenzo Bernini" in John Thomas, Happiness, Truth & Holy Images. Essays of Popular Theology and Religion & Art (Wolverhampton, Twin Books, 2019), pp. 12–16.
  • John Thomas, "Architectural image and via mystica. St. Teresa's Las Moradas", in John Thomas, Happiness, Truth & Holy Images. Essays of Popular Theology and Religion & Art (Wolverhampton, Twin Books, 2019), pp. 39–48.
  • Du Boulay, Shirley (2004). Teresa of Avila: An Extraordinary Life. Katonah, New York: BlueBridge. ISBN 978-0-974-24052-7.

External links

  • "Works of St. Teresa of Avila (Online)". Christian Classics Ethereal Library.
  • Teresa 500: Videos of a conference held at Roehampton University in 2015 on the 500th anniversary of Teresa's birth
  • "St. Teresa, Virgin", Butler's Lives of the Saints
  • Founder Statue in St Peter's Basilica
  • Biography Online: Saint Teresa of Avila
  • Books written by Saint Teresa of Avila, including Saint John of the Cross
  • Works by Teresa of Ávila at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Teresa of Ávila at Internet Archive
  • Works by Teresa of Ávila at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Basilica of Saint Teresa in Alba de Tormes 28 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish)
  • Alba de Tormes, sepulcro de Santa Teresa – Tomb of Saint Teresa on YouTube (in Spanish)
  • Life of St. Teresa of Jesus, of The Order of Our Lady of Carmel
  • Way of Perfection
  • Interior Castle or The Mansions
  • Poems of Saint Teresa
  • Santa Teresa: an Appreciation, 1900, by Alexander Whyte, from Project Gutenberg
  • Colonnade Statue St Peter's Square

teresa, Ávila, other, people, with, similar, name, list, saints, named, teresa, born, teresa, sánchez, cepeda, ahumada, march, 1515, october, 1582, also, called, saint, teresa, jesus, spanish, carmelite, prominent, spanish, mystic, religious, reformer, saintoc. For other people with similar a name see List of saints named Teresa Teresa of Avila OCD born Teresa Sanchez de Cepeda y Ahumada 28 March 1515 4 or 15 October 1582 a also called Saint Teresa of Jesus was a Spanish Carmelite nun and prominent Spanish mystic and religious reformer SaintTeresa of AvilaOCDSaint Teresa of Avila by Eduardo BalacaVirgin Doctor of the ChurchBornTeresa Sanchez de Cepeda y Ahumada28 March 1515Avila Crown of Castile today Spain Died4 October 1582 1582 10 04 aged 67 Alba de Tormes Salamanca Crown of Castile today Spain Theology careerNotable workCamino de PerfeccionEl Castillo InteriorTheological workEraCatholic ReformationTradition or movementChristian mysticismMain interestsTheologyNotable ideasMental prayer Prayer of QuietVenerated inRoman Catholic ChurchAnglican Communion web 1 1 Lutheranism web 2 Beatified24 April 1614 Rome by Pope Paul VCanonized12 March 1622 Rome by Pope Gregory XVMajor shrineConvent of the Annunciation Alba de Tormes SpainFeast15 OctoberAttributesCarmelite religious habit biretta quill dove as an attribute of the Holy Spirit heart with a christogramPatronageSpain sick people people in religious orders people ridiculed for their piety lacemakers Pozega Croatia Talisay City Cebu PhilippinesControversyHer reforms met with determined opposition and interest from the Spanish Inquisition but no charges were laid against her Her order split as a result Active during the Counter Reformation Teresa became the central figure of a movement of spiritual and monastic renewal reforming the Carmelite Orders of both women and men 2 The movement was later joined by the younger Spanish Carmelite friar and mystic John of the Cross with whom she established the Discalced Carmelites A formal papal decree adopting the split from the old order was issued in 1580 web 3 Her autobiography The Life of Teresa of Jesus The Interior Castle and The Way of Perfection are prominent works on Christian mysticism and Christian meditation practice In her autobiography written as a defense of her ecstatic mystical experiences she discerns four stages in the ascent of the soul to God mental prayer and meditation the prayer of quiet absorption in God ecstatic consciousness Forty years after her death in 1622 Teresa was canonized by Pope Gregory XV On 27 September 1970 Pope Paul VI proclaimed Teresa the first female Doctor of the Church in recognition of her centuries long spiritual legacy to Catholicism 3 web 4 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Religious life 1 2 1 Ascetic and mystical practice 1 2 2 Transverberation 1 2 3 Monastic reformer 1 2 4 Extended travels 1 2 5 Opposition to reforms 1 3 Last days 1 4 After her death 1 4 1 Holy relics 1 4 2 Canonization 1 4 3 Patron saint 1 4 4 Legacy regarding the Infant Jesus of Prague 2 Writings 2 1 Autobiography 2 2 The Way of Perfection 2 3 Interior Castle 2 3 1 Translations 2 3 2 In popular culture 2 4 Other 3 Mysticism 3 1 Four stages as described in the autobiography 3 2 The seven mansions of the Interior castle 3 3 Nine grades of prayer 3 3 1 Overview 3 3 2 Ordinary prayer or ascetical stage 3 3 2 1 Mental or meditational prayer 3 3 2 2 Natural or acquired contemplation prayer of simplicity 3 3 3 Infused or higher contemplation mystical union 3 3 3 1 The Prayer of Quiet 3 3 3 2 Full or semi ecstatic union 3 3 3 3 Ecstatic union 3 3 3 4 Transforming union 4 Portrayals 4 1 Literature 4 2 Painting and sculpture 4 3 Drama and film 4 4 Music 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Teresa Sanchez de Cepeda y Ahumada was born in 1515 in Avila Spain Her paternal grandfather Juan Sanchez de Toledo was a marrano or converso a Jew forced to convert to Christianity or emigrate When Teresa s father was a child Juan was condemned by the Spanish Inquisition for allegedly returning to Judaism but he was later able to assume a Catholic identity 4 Her father Alonso Sanchez de Cepeda was a successful wool merchant and one of the wealthiest men in Avila He bought a knighthood and assimilated successfully into Christian society Teresa of Avila elopes to travel to Africa by Arnold van Westerhout Previously married to Catalina del Peso y Henao with whom he had three children in 1509 Sanchez de Cepeda married Teresa s mother Beatriz de Ahumada y Cuevas in Gotarrendura 5 Teresa s mother brought her up as a dedicated Christian Fascinated by accounts of the lives of the saints she ran away from home at age seven with her brother Rodrigo to seek martyrdom in the fight against the Moors Her uncle brought them home when he spotted them just outside the town walls 6 When Teresa was eleven years old her mother died leaving her grief stricken This prompted her to embrace a deeper devotion to the Virgin Mary as her spiritual mother Teresa was also enamored of popular fiction which at the time consisted primarily of medieval tales of knighthood and works about fashion gardens and flowers 7 web 5 Teresa was sent to the Augustinian nuns school at Avila 8 Religious life Edit Ascetic and mystical practice Edit After completing her education she initially resisted the idea of a religious vocation but after a stay with her uncle and other relatives she relented In 1534 aged 20 9 much to the disappointment of her pious and austere father she decided to enter the local easy going Carmelite Convent of the Incarnation significantly built on top of land that had been used previously as a burial ground for Jews She took up religious reading on contemplative prayer especially Osuna s Abecedario espiritual Third Spiritual Alphabet 1527 a guide on examination of conscience and spiritual self concentration and inner contemplation known in mystical nomenclature as oratio recollectionis 10 She also dipped into other mystical ascetical works such as the Tractatus de oratione et meditatione of Peter of Alcantara 10 Her zeal for mortification caused her to become ill again and she spent almost a year in bed causing huge worry to her community and family She nearly died but she recovered attributing her recovery to the miraculous intercession of Saint Joseph She began to experience bouts of religious ecstasy 5 She reported that during her illness she had progressed from the lowest stage of recollection to the devotions of silence and even to the devotions of ecstasy which was one of perceived perfect union with God see Mysticism She said she frequently experienced the rich blessing of tears during this final stage As the Catholic distinction between mortal and venial sin became clear to her she came to understand the awful horror of sin and the inherent nature of original sin She also became conscious of her own natural impotence in confronting sin and the need for absolute surrender to God citation needed Around the same time she received a copy of the full Spanish translation of Augustine of Hippo s autobiographical work Confessions which helped her resolve and to tend to her own bouts of religious scruples The text helped her realize that holiness was indeed possible and she found solace in the idea that such a great saint was once an inveterate sinner In her autobiography she wrote that she was very fond of St Augustine for he was a sinner too 11 Transverberation Edit Around 1556 friends suggested that her newfound knowledge could be of diabolical and not of divine origin She had begun to inflict mortifications of the flesh upon herself But her confessor the Jesuit Francis Borgia reassured her of the divine inspiration of her thoughts On St Peter s Day in 1559 Teresa became firmly convinced that Jesus Christ had presented himself to her in bodily form though invisible These visions lasted almost uninterruptedly for more than two years In another vision the famous transverberation a seraph drove the fiery point of a golden lance repeatedly through her heart causing her an ineffable spiritual and bodily pain I saw in his hand a long spear of gold and at the point there seemed to be a little fire He appeared to me to be thrusting it at times into my heart and to pierce my very entrails when he drew it out he seemed to draw them out also and to leave me all on fire with a great love of God The pain was so great that it made me moan and yet so surpassing was the sweetness of this excessive pain that I could not wish to be rid of it b The account of this vision was the inspiration for one of Bernini s most famous works the Ecstasy of Saint Teresa at Santa Maria della Vittoria in Rome Although based in part on Teresa s description of her mystical transverberation in her autobiography Bernini s depiction of the event is considered by some to be highly eroticized especially when compared to the entire preceding artistic Teresian tradition c The memory of this episode served as an inspiration throughout the rest of her life and motivated her lifelong imitation of the life and suffering of Jesus epitomized in the adage often associated with her Lord either let me suffer or let me die 12 Teresa who became a celebrity in her town dispensing wisdom from behind the convent grille was known for her raptures which sometimes involved levitation It was a source of embarrassment to her and she bade her sisters hold her down when this occurred Subsequently historians neurologists and psychiatrists like Peter Fenwick and Javier Alvarez Rodriguez among others have taken an interest in her symptomatology The fact that she wrote down virtually everything that happened to her during her religious life means that an invaluable and exceedingly rare medical record from the 16th century has been preserved Examination of this record has led to the speculative conclusion that she may have suffered from temporal lobe epilepsy 13 14 Monastic reformer Edit Over time Teresa found herself increasingly at odds with the spiritual malaise prevailing in her convent of the Incarnation Among the 150 nuns living there the observance of cloister designed to protect and strengthen spiritual practice and prayer became so lax that it appeared to lose its purpose The daily invasion of visitors many of high social and political rank disturbed the atmosphere with frivolous concerns and vacuous conversation Such intrusions in the solitude essential to develop and sustain contemplative prayer so grieved Teresa that she longed to intervene web 6 The incentive to take the practical steps inspired by her inward motivation was supported by the Franciscan priest Peter of Alcantara who met her early in 1560 and became her spiritual adviser She resolved to found a reformed Carmelite convent correcting the laxity which she had found at the Incarnation convent and elsewhere besides Guimara de Ulloa a woman of wealth and a friend supplied the funds for the project citation needed The abject poverty of the new convent established in 1562 and named St Joseph s San Jose at first caused a scandal among the citizens and authorities of Avila and the small house with its chapel was in peril of suppression However powerful patrons including the local bishop coupled with the impression of well ordered subsistence and purpose turned animosity into approval citation needed In March 1563 after Teresa had moved to the new convent house she received papal sanction for her primary principles of absolute poverty and renunciation of ownership of property which she proceeded to formulate into a constitution Her plan was the revival of the earlier stricter monastic rules supplemented by new regulations including the three disciplines of ceremonial flagellation prescribed for the Divine Office every week and the discalceation of the religious For the first five years Teresa remained in seclusion mostly engaged in prayer and writing citation needed Church window at the Convent of St Teresa Extended travels Edit In 1567 Teresa received a patent from the Carmelite General Rubeo de Ravenna to establish further houses of the new order This process required many visitations and long journeys across nearly all the provinces of Spain She left a record of the arduous project in her Libro de las Fundaciones Between 1567 and 1571 reformed convents were established at Medina del Campo Malagon Valladolid Toledo Pastrana Salamanca and Alba de Tormes As part of the original patent Teresa was given permission to set up two houses for men who wished to adopt the reforms She convinced two Carmelite friars John of the Cross and Anthony of Jesus to help with this They founded the first monastery of Discalced Carmelite brothers in November 1568 at Duruelo Another friend of Teresa Jeronimo Gracian the Carmelite visitator of the older observance of Andalusia and apostolic commissioner and later provincial of the Teresian order gave her powerful support in founding monasteries at Segovia 1571 Beas de Segura 1574 Seville 1575 and Caravaca de la Cruz Murcia 1576 Meanwhile John of the Cross promoted the inner life of the movement through his power as a teacher and preacher 15 Opposition to reforms Edit In 1576 unreformed members of the Carmelite order began to persecute Teresa her supporters and her reforms Following a number of resolutions adopted at the general chapter at Piacenza the governing body of the order forbade all further founding of reformed convents The general chapter instructed her to go into voluntary retirement at one of her institutions 15 She obeyed and chose St Joseph s at Toledo Meanwhile her friends and associates were subjected to further attacks 15 Several years later her appeals by letter to King Philip II of Spain secured relief As a result in 1579 the cases before the inquisition against her Gracian and others were dropped 15 This allowed the reform to resume An edict from Pope Gregory XIII allowed the appointment of a special provincial for the newer branch of the Carmelite religious and a royal decree created a protective board of four assessors for the reform 15 During the last three years of her life Teresa founded convents at Villanueva de la Jara in northern Andalusia 1580 Palencia 1580 Soria 1581 Burgos and Granada 1582 In total seventeen convents all but one founded by her and as many men s monasteries were owed to her reforms over twenty years 16 Last days EditHer final illness overtook her on one of her journeys from Burgos to Alba de Tormes She died in 1582 just as Catholic Europe was making the switch from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar which required the excision of the dates of 5 14 October from the calendar She died either before midnight of 4 October or early in the morning of 15 October which is celebrated as her feast day According to the liturgical calendar then in use she died on the 15th Her last words were My Lord it is time to move on Well then may your will be done O my Lord and my Spouse the hour that I have longed for has come It is time to meet one another 17 Avila Saint Theresa s statue After her death Edit Holy relics Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message She was buried at the Convento de la Anunciacion in Alba de Tormes Nine months after her death the coffin was opened and her body was found to be intact but the clothing had rotted Before the body was re interred one of her hands was cut off wrapped in a scarf and sent to Avila Gracian cut the little finger off the hand and according to his own account kept it with him until it was taken by the occupying Ottoman Turks from whom he had to redeem it with a few rings and 20 reales The body was exhumed again on 25 November 1585 to be moved to Avila and found to be incorrupt An arm was removed and left in Alba de Tormes at the nuns request to compensate for losing the main relic of Teresa but the rest of the body was reburied in the Discalced Carmelite chapter house in Avila The removal was done without the approval of the Duke of Alba de Tormes and he brought the body back in 1586 with Pope Sixtus V ordering that it remain in Alba de Tormes on pain of excommunication A grander tomb on the original site was raised in 1598 and the body was moved to a new chapel in 1616 The body still remains there except for the following parts Rome right foot and part of the upper jaw Lisbon hand Ronda Spain left eye and left hand the latter was kept by Francisco Franco until his death after Francoist troops captured it from Republican troops during the Spanish Civil War Museum of the Church of the Annunciation Alba de Tormes left arm and heart Church of Our Lady of Loreto Paris France one finger Sanlucar de Barrameda one finger The Ecstasy of Saint Teresa by Bernini Basilica of Santa Maria della Vittoria Rome Canonization Edit Statue of Saint Teresa of Avila in Mafra National Palace Mafra In 1622 forty years after her death she was canonized by Pope Gregory XV The Cortes exalted her to patroness of Spain in 1627 The University of Salamanca had granted her the title Doctor ecclesiae Latin for Doctor of the Church with a diploma in her lifetime dubious discuss but that title is distinct from the papal honour of Doctor of the Church which is always conferred posthumously The latter was finally bestowed upon her by Pope Paul VI on 27 September 1970 3 along with Catherine of Siena 18 making them the first women to be awarded the distinction Teresa is revered as the Doctor of Prayer The mysticism in her works exerted a formative influence upon many theologians of the following centuries such as Francis of Sales Fenelon and the Port Royalists In 1670 her coffin was plated in silver Teresa of Avila is honored in the Church of England and in the Episcopal Church on 15 October web 7 1 Patron saint Edit In 1626 at the request of Philip IV of Spain the Castilian parliament d elected Teresa without lacking one vote as copatron saint of Castile 19 This status was affirmed by Pope Urban VIII in a brief issued on 21 July 1627 in which he stated For these reasons the king s and Cortes s elections and for the great devotion which they have for Teresa they elected her for patron and advocate of these kingdoms in the last Cortes of the aforementioned kingdoms And because the representatives in the Cortes desired it so greatly that their vote be firm and perpetual we grant it our patronage and the approval of the Holy Apostolic See Rowe 2011 pp 77 78 More broadly the 1620s the entirety of Spain Castile and beyond debated who should be the country s patron saint the choices were either the current patron James Matamoros or a pairing of him and the newly canonised Saint Teresa of Avila Teresa s promoters said Spain faced newer challenges especially the threat of Protestantism and societal decline at home thus needing a more contemporary patron who understood those issues and could guide the Spanish nation Santiago s supporters Santiaguistas fought back and eventually won the argument but Teresa of Avila remained far more popular at the local level 20 page needed James the Great kept the title of patron saint for the Spanish people and the most Blessed Virgin Mary under the title Immaculate Conception as the sole patroness for the entire Spanish Kingdom Legacy regarding the Infant Jesus of Prague Edit It is love alone that gives worth to all things The Spanish nuns who established Carmel in France brought a devotion to the Infant Jesus with them and it became widespread in France 21 web 8 Though there are no written historical accounts establishing that Teresa of Avila ever owned the famous Infant Jesus of Prague statue according to tradition such a statue is said to have been in her possession and Teresa is reputed to have given it to a noblewoman travelling to Prague 22 web 9 web 10 web 11 The age of the statue dates to approximately the same time as Teresa It has been thought that Teresa carried a portable statue of the Child Jesus wherever she went the idea circulated by the early 1700s 23 page needed Writings Edit This is the one portrait of Teresa that is probably the most true to her appearance It is a copy of an original 1576 painting of her when she was 61 Autobiography Edit The autobiography La Vida de la Santa Madre Teresa de Jesus The Life of the Holy Mother Teresa of Jesus was written between composed at Avila between 1562 and 1565 but published posthumously 24 Editions include The Life of St Teresa of Jesus Written by Herself Translated from the Spanish by D Lewis 1870 London Burns Oates amp Co The Autobiography written before 1567 under the direction of her confessor Fr Pedro Ibanez 1882 The Life Of Saint Teresa Of Avila By Herself J M Cohen 1957 Penguin Classics Life of St Teresa of Jesus Translated by Benedict Zimmerman 1997 Tan Books ISBN 978 0 89555 603 5 The Life of Teresa of Jesus The Autobiography of Teresa of Avila Translated by E Allison Peers 1991 Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 01109 9 The Book of Her Life translated with notes by Kieran Kavanaugh OCD and Otilio Rodriguez OCD 2008 Introduction by Jodi Bilinkoff Indianapolis Cambridge Hackett Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 87220 907 7 The Book of My Life Mirabai Starr 2008 Boston Massachusetts Shambhala Publications ISBN 978 1 59030 573 7The Way of Perfection Edit The Way of Perfection Spanish Camino de Perfeccion was published in 1566 Teresa called this a living book and in it set out to teach her nuns how to progress through prayer and Christian meditation She discusses the rationale for being a Carmelite and the rest deals with the purpose of and approaches to spiritual life The title was inspired by the devotional book The Imitation of Christ 1418 which had become a favourite expression of Teresa much before she wrote this work as it appeared at several places in her autobiography The Life of Teresa of Jesus Like her other books The Way of Perfection was written on the advice of her counsellors to describe her experiences in prayer during the period when the Reformation was spreading through Europe Herein she describes ways of attaining spiritual perfection through prayer and its four stages as in meditation quiet repose of soul and finally perfect union with God which she equates with rapture EditionsThe Way of Perfection Translated and Edited by E Allison Peers Doubleday 1991 ISBN 978 0 385 06539 9 The Way of Perfection TAN Books 1997 ISBN 978 0 89555 602 8 Way of Perfection London 2012 limovia net ISBN 978 1 78336 025 3 El Camino de Perfeccion The Way of Perfection written also before 1567 at the direction of her confessor Interior Castle Edit The Interior Castle or The Mansions Spanish El Castillo Interior or Las Moradas was written in 1577 and published in 1588 25 26 It contained the basis for what she felt should be the ideal journey of faith comparing the contemplative soul to a castle with seven successive interior courts or chambers analogous to the seven mansions The work was inspired by her vision of the soul as a diamond in the shape of a castle containing seven mansions which she interpreted as the journey of faith through seven stages ending with union with God 27 Fray Diego one of Teresa s former confessors wrote that God revealed to Teresa a most beautiful crystal globe made in the shape of a castle and containing seven mansions in the seventh and innermost of which was the King of Glory in the greatest splendour illumining and beautifying them all The nearer one got to the centre the stronger was the light outside the palace limits everything was foul dark and infested with toads vipers and other venomous creatures 28 Christia Mercer Columbia University philosophy professor claims that the seventeenth century Frenchman Rene Descartes lifted some of his most influential ideas from Teresa of Avila who fifty years before Descartes wrote popular books about the role of philosophical reflection in intellectual growth 29 She describes a number of striking similarities between Descartes s seminal work Meditations on First Philosophy and Teresa s Interior Castle web 12 Translations Edit The first English translation was published in 1675 Fr John Dalton 1852 John Dalton s translation of The Interior Castle contains an interesting preface and translations of other letters by St Teresa Benedictines of Stanbrook edited by Fr Zimmerman 1921 The translation of The Interior Castle by the Benedictines of Stanbrook also has an excellent introduction and includes many cross references to other works by St Teresa E Allison Peers 1946 E Allison Peers translation of The Interior Castle is another popular public domain version translated by a professor and scholar of Hispanic studies Fr Kieran Kavanaugh 1979 This translation also stays true to the text and contains many useful cross references An updated study edition contains comprehensive notes reflection questions and a glossary The Interior Castle The Mansions TAN Books 1997 ISBN 978 0 89555 604 2 Mirabai Starr 2004 Described as free of religious dogma this modern translation renders St Teresa s work a beautiful and practical set of teachings for seekers of all faiths in need of spiritual guidance Starr s interpretive version of The Interior Castle eliminates Teresa s use of words such as sin which results in a translation which is more paraphrased than accurate translation The Interior Castle Modern update of the spiritual guide by Teresa of Avila by M B Anderson Root Classics publisher 2022 ISBN 978 1 956314 01 4 e In popular culture Edit St Teresa s mystical experiences have inspired several authors in modern times but not necessarily from Teresa s Christian theological perspective The 2006 book Eat Pray Love by Elizabeth Gilbert recognizes St Teresa as that most mystical of Catholic figures and alludes to St Teresa s Interior Castle as the mansions of her being and her journey as one of divine meditative bliss Gilbert was raised a Protestant Christian but her book describes her path to God through yoga 30 The 2007 book by American spiritual author Caroline Myss Entering the Castle was inspired by St Teresa s Interior Castle but still has a New Age approach to mysticism 31 32 St Teresa also inspired American author R A Lafferty in his novel Fourth Mansions 1969 which was nominated for the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1970 Brooke Fraser s song Orphans Kingdoms was inspired by St Teresa s Interior Castle Jean Stafford s short story The Interior Castle relates the intense preoccupation of an accident victim with her own brain which she sees variously as a jewel a flower a light in a glass and a set of envelopes within envelopes Jeffrey Eugenides 2011 novel The Marriage Plot refers to St Teresa s Interior Castle when recounting the religious experience of Mitchell Grammaticus one of the main characters of the book Teen Daze s 33 2012 release The Inner Mansions refers to St Teresa s Interior Castle in the album s title as well as in the first track have mercy on yourselves If you realize your pitiable condition how can you refrain from trying to remove the darkness from the crystal of your souls Remember if death should take you now you would never again enjoy the light of this Sun 34 This line appears dubbed over the musical introduction to New Life 35 In Mark Williamson s ONE a memoir 2018 the metaphor of the Interior Castle is used to describe an inner world of introspective reflection on past events a set of memory loci based on the ancient system of recall for rhetorical purposes Other Edit Relaciones Relationships an extension of the autobiography giving her inner and outer experiences in epistolary form Her rare poems Todas las poesias Munster 1854 are distinguished for tenderness of feeling and rhythm of thought The Complete Poetry of St Teresa of Avila A Bilingual Edition Edicion y traduccion de Eric W Vogt New Orleans University Press of the South 1996 Second edition 2015 xl 116 p ISBN 978 1 937030 52 0 Meditations on Song of Songs 1567 written nominally for her daughters at the convent of Our Lady of Mount Carmel Conceptos del Amor Concepts of Love and Exclamaciones Las Cartas Saragossa 1671 or her correspondence of which there are 342 extant letters and 87 fragments of others The first edition of Teresa s letters was published in 1658 with the comment of Juan de Palafox y Mendoza Roman Catholic bishop of Osma and an opponent to the Company of Jesus 36 The Complete Works of St Teresa of Jesus in five volumes translated and edited by E Allison Peers including 2 volumes of correspondence London Sheed and Ward 1982 Mysticism EditThe prayer Nada te turbe Let nothing disturb you is attributed to Teresa having been found within her breviary web 13 Let nothing disturb you Let nothing make you afraid All things are passing God alone never changes Patience gains all things If you have God you will want for nothing God alone suffices Kirvan 1996 Teresa of Avila See also Christian contemplation The ultimate preoccupation of Teresa s mystical thought as consistently reflected in her writings is the ascent of the soul to God Aumann notes that the grades of prayer described in The Life do not correspond to the division of prayer commonly given in the manuals of spiritual life due to the fact that St Teresa did not write a systematic theology of prayer 37 According to Zimmerman In all her writings on this subject she deals with her personal experiences there is no vestige in her writings of any influence of the Areopagite the Patristic or the Scholastic Mystical schools as represented among others by the German Dominican Mystics She is intensely personal her system going exactly as far as her experiences but not a step further 38 Teresa describes in the Interior Castle that the treasure of heaven lies buried within our hearts and that there is an interior part of the heart which is the centre of the soul 12 Four stages as described in the autobiography Edit In her autobiography she describes four stages 39 in which she uses the image of watering one s garden as a metaphor for mystical prayer f The first Devotion of the Heart consists of mental prayer and meditation It means the withdrawal of the soul from without penitence and especially the devout meditation on the passion of Christ Autobiography 11 20 The second Devotion of Peace is where human will is surrendered to God This occurs by virtue of an uplifted awareness granted by God while other faculties such as memory reason and imagination are not yet safe from worldly distraction Although a partial distraction can happen due to outer activity such as repetition of prayers or writing down spiritual things the prevailing state is one of quietude Autobiography 14 1 The third Devotion of Union concerns the absorption in God It is not only a heightened but essentially an ecstatic state At this level reason is also surrendered to God and only the memory and imagination are left to ramble This state is characterized by a blissful peace a sweet slumber of at least the higher soul faculties that is a consciousness of being enraptured by the love of God The fourth Devotion of Ecstasy is where the consciousness of being in the body disappears Sensory faculties cease to operate Memory and imagination also become absorbed in God as though intoxicated Body and spirit dwell in the throes of exquisite pain alternating between a fearful fiery glow in complete unconscious helplessness and periods of apparent strangulation Sometimes such ecstatic transports literally cause the body to be lifted into space 40 This state may last as long as half an hour and tends to be followed by relaxation of a few hours of swoon like weakness attended by the absence of all faculties while in union with God The subject awakens from this trance state in tears It may be regarded as the culmination of mystical experience Indeed Teresa was said to have been observed levitating during Mass on more than one occasion 40 The seven mansions of the Interior castle Edit The Interior Castle is divided into seven mansions also called dwelling places each level describing a step to get closer to God In her work Teresa already assumed entrance into the first mansions by prayer and meditation The purgative stage involving active prayer and asceticism web 14 The first mansion begin with a soul s state of grace but the souls are surrounded by sin and only starting to seek God s grace through humility in order to achieve perfection The second mansions are also called the Mansion of the Practice of Prayer because the soul seeks to advance through the castle by daily thoughts of God humble recognition of God s work in the soul and ultimately daily prayer The third mansions are the Mansions of Exemplary Life characterized through divine grace and a love for God that is so great that the soul has an aversion to both mortal and venial sin and a desire to do works of charitable service to man for the ultimate glory of God The prayer of acquired recollection belongs to the third mansion 41 The illuminative stage the beginning of mystical or contemplative or supernatural prayer web 14 The fourth mansions are a departure from the soul actively acquiring what it gains as God increases his role In this mansion the soul begins to experience two types of supernatural prayer namely the Prayer of Supernatural or passive Recollection and The Prayer of Quiet web 14 The fifth mansion is The Prayer of Union in which the soul prepares itself to receive gifts from God Unitive stage web 14 The sixth mansion is the betrothal engagement of the soul with God can be compared to lovers The soul spends increasing amounts of time torn between favors from God and from outside afflictions The seventh mansion is the spiritual marriage with God in which the soul achieves clarity in prayerSome scholars have compared the seven mansions to the seven chakras in Hindu culture 42 Nine grades of prayer Edit Overview Edit The first four grades of Teresa s classifications of prayer belong to the ascetical stage of spiritual life These are vocal prayer meditational or mental prayer affective prayer and acquired or natural recollection 43 44 web 15 According to Augustin Poulain and Robert Thouless Teresa described four degrees or stages of mystical union namely the prayer of quiet full or semi ecstatic union ecstatic union or ecstasy and transforming or deifying union or spiritual marriage properly of the soul with God 43 45 TWhile Augustin Poulain and Robert Thouless don t mention the Prayer of Supernatural or passive Recollection as a separate stage 43 45 Aumann discerns infused contemplation as a separate stage in the fourth mansion of the Interior Castle 44 web 15 Together these five grades are infused prayer and belong to the mystical phase of spiritual life 44 web 15 Thomas Merton disagrees on a fine cut distinction between acquired contemplation and the prayer of quiet noticing the Carmelite tendency of systematization whereas Teresa herself was just describing her personal experiences 46 Commenting on Teresa s writings and the scholarly discussions on the precise stages Thomas Merton comments with all these divisions and distinctions comings and goings and varieties of terms one tends to become impatient with the saint 47 Aumann synthesizes Teresa s writings into nine grades of prayer 44 48 web 15 Threefold classification The Life Interior Castle Nine gradesAscetic Devotion of the Heart First mansions 1 vocal prayer2 mental prayer or prayer of meditation3 affective prayerSecond and third mansions 4 prayer of simplicity or acquired contemplation or recollectionIlluminative Devotion of Peace Fourth mansions 5 infused contemplation or recollection6 prayer of quietUnitive Devotion of Union Fifth mansions 7 prayer of simple unionDevotion of Ecstacy Sixth mansions 8 prayer of conforming or ecstatic unionSeventh mansions 9 prayer of transforming union Ordinary prayer or ascetical stage Edit Mental or meditational prayer Edit Mental prayer is a form of prayer performed without aid of any particular formula 49 It is distinguished from vocal prayers prayers performed by means of a given formula 49 Prayer is mental when the thoughts and affections of the soul are not expressed in a previously determined formula web 16 According to Teresa of Avila mental prayer is meditational prayer in which the person is like a gardener who with much labour draws the water up from the depths of the well to water the plants and flowers 50 51 According to Teresa of Avila mental prayer can proceed by using vocal prayers in order to improve dialogue with God 52 According to Lehodey mental prayer can be divided into meditation more active in reflections and contemplation more quiet and gazeful 53 Natural or acquired contemplation prayer of simplicity Edit For Teresa of Avila in natural or acquired contemplation also called the prayer of simplicity g there is one dominant thought or sentiment which recurs constantly and easily although with little or no development amid many other thoughts beneficial or otherwise The prayer of simplicity often has a tendency to simplify itself even in respect to its object leading one to think chiefly of God and of his presence but in a confused manner 43 In the words of Saint Alphonsus Maria de Liguori acquired contemplation consists in seeing at a simple glance the truths which could previously be discovered only through prolonged discourse reasoning is largely replaced by intuition and affections and resolutions though not absent are only slightly varied and expressed in a few words Similarly Saint Ignatius of Loyola in his 30 day retreat or Spiritual Exercises beginning in the second week with its focus on the life of Jesus describes less reflection and more simple contemplation on the events of Jesus life These contemplations consist mainly in a simple gaze and include an application of the senses to the events 55 121 to further one s empathy for Jesus values to love him more and to follow him more closely 55 104 Definitions similar to that of Saint Alphonsus Maria de Liguori are given by Adolphe Tanquerey a simple gaze on God and divine things proceeding from love and tending thereto and Saint Francis de Sales a loving simple and permanent attentiveness of the mind to divine things 56 Natural or acquired contemplation has been compared to the attitude of a mother watching over the cradle of her child she thinks lovingly of the child without reflection and amid interruptions The Catechism of the Catholic Church states What is contemplative prayer St Teresa answers Contemplative sic h prayer oracion mental in my opinion is nothing else than a close sharing between friends it means taking time frequently to be alone with him who we know loves us Contemplative prayer seeks him whom my soul loves It is Jesus and in him the Father We seek him because to desire him is always the beginning of love and we seek him in that pure faith which causes us to be born of him and to live in him In this inner prayer we can still meditate but our attention is fixed on the Lord himself 60 Infused or higher contemplation mystical union Edit According to Hardon infused contemplation is A supernatural gift by which a person s mind and will become totally centered on God Under this influence the intellect receives special insights into things of the spirit and the affections are extraordinarily animated with divine love Infused contemplation assumes the free co operation of the human will 61 According to Poulain it is a form of mystical union with God a union characterized by the fact that it is God and God only who manifests Himself 43 According to Poulain mystical grage may also manifestat as visions of the humanity of Christ or an angel or revelations of a future event and include miraculous bodily phenomena sometimes observed in ecstatics 43 In Teresa s mysticism infused contemplation is described as a divinely originated general non conceptual loving awareness of God 62 According to Dubay It is a wordless awareness and love that we of ourselves cannot initiate or prolong The beginnings of this contemplation are brief and frequently interrupted by distractions The reality is so unimposing that one who lacks instruction can fail to appreciate what exactly is taking place Initial infused prayer is so ordinary and unspectacular in the early stages that many fail to recognize it for what it is Yet with generous people that is with those who try to live the whole Gospel wholeheartedly and who engage in an earnest prayer life it is common 62 According to Thomas Dubay infused contemplation is the normal ordinary development of discursive prayer mental prayer meditative prayer which it gradually replaces 62 Dubay considers infused contemplation as common only among those who try to live the whole Gospel wholeheartedly and who engage in an earnest prayer life Other writers view contemplative prayer in its infused supernatural form as far from common John Baptist Scaramelli reacting in the 17th century against quietism taught that asceticism and mysticism are two distinct paths to perfection the former being the normal ordinary end of the Christian life and the latter something extraordinary and very rare 63 Jordan Aumann considered that this idea of the two paths was an innovation in spiritual theology and a departure from the traditional Catholic teaching 64 And Jacques Maritain proposed that one should not say that every mystic necessarily enjoys habitual infused contemplation in the mystical state since the gifts of the Holy Spirit are not limited to intellectual operations 65 The Prayer of Quiet Edit For Teresa of Avila the Prayer of Quiet is a state in which the soul experiences an extraordinary peace and rest accompanied by delight or pleasure in contemplating God as present 66 67 web 17 68 According to Poulain Mystical union will be called spiritual quiet when the Divine action is still too weak to prevent distractions in a word when the imagination still retains a certain liberty 43 According to Poulain in incomplete mystical union or the prayer of quiet or supernatural recollection the action of God is not strong enough to prevent distractions and the imagination still retains a certain liberty 43 Full or semi ecstatic union Edit According to Poulain Mystical union will be called full union when its strength is so great that the soul is fully occupied with the Divine object whilst on the other hand the senses continue to act under these conditions by making a greater or less effort one can cease from prayer 43 Ecstatic union Edit According to Poulain Mystical union will be called ecstasy when communications with the external world are severed or nearly so in this event one can no longer make voluntary movement nor energy from the state at will 43 Transforming union Edit The transforming union differs from the other three specifically and not merely in intensity According to Poulain It consists in the habitual consciousness of a mysterious grace which all shall possess in heaven the anticipation of the Divine nature The soul is conscious of the Divine assistance in its superior supernatural operations those of the intellect and the will Spiritual marriage differs from spiritual espousals inasmuch as the first of these states is permanent and the second only transitory 43 Portrayals EditPortrayals of Teresa include the following Detail of St Theresa 1827 by French painter Francois Gerard Portrait of Sarah Bernhardt as Therese in La Vierge d Avila by Catulle Mendes 1906 Literature Edit Simone de Beauvoir singles out Teresa as a woman who truly lived life for herself and perhaps the only woman to do so in her book The Second Sex 69 She is mentioned prominently in Kathryn Harrison s novel Poison 70 The main character Francisca De Luarca is fascinated by her life Don DeLillo in End Zone depicted Teresa as a saint who eats from a human skull to remind herself of final things R A Lafferty was strongly inspired by El Castillo Interior when he wrote his novel Fourth Mansions Quotations from St Teresa s work are frequently used as chapter headings 71 Pierre Klossowski prominently features Saint Teresa of Avila in his metaphysical novel The Baphomet 72 George Eliot compared Dorothea Brooke to St Teresa in Middlemarch 1871 1872 and wrote briefly about the life and works of St Teresa in the Prelude to the novel 73 Thomas Hardy took Saint Teresa as the inspiration for much of the characterisation of the heroine Tess Teresa Durbeyfield in Tess of the d Urbervilles 1891 most notably the scene in which she lies in a field and senses her soul ecstatically above her 74 The contemporary poet Jorie Graham features Saint Teresa in the poem Breakdancing in her volume The End of Beauty 75 Barbara Mujica s novel Sister Teresa while not strictly hagiographical is based upon Teresa s life web 18 Timothy Findley s 1999 novel Pilgrim features Saint Teresa as a minor character 76 Vita Sackville West wrote a double biography contrasting the two Carmelite Theresas The Eagle and the Dove re issued in 2018 77 Zepeda Reginald 2012 From Spain to Texas A Cepeda y Ahumada Family Journey Xlibris ISBN 9781479770083 self published source Painting and sculpture Edit Saint Teresa of Avila s Vision of the Holy Spirit is a 1612 1614 painting by Peter Paul Rubens and is exhibited in the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam 78 and Rubens c 1614 painting of the same subject is in the Fitzwilliam Museum Cambridge Another Rubens portrait of Teresa from 1615 is now in the collection of the Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna web 19 Saint Teresa was the inspiration for one of Bernini s most famous sculptures The Ecstasy of St Teresa mid 17th century in Santa Maria della Vittoria Rome 79 web 20 St Teresa was painted in 1819 20 by Francois Gerard a French neoclassical painter web 21 St Theresa of Avila is a 1754 1755 painting by Joseph Marie Vien and is exhibited in the New Orleans Museum of Art in New Orleans Louisiana Drama and film Edit Hugh Ross Williamson wrote a play Teresa of Avila about her life which premiered in London in 1961 Performance artist Linda Montano has cited Teresa of Avila as one of the most important influences on her work and since her return to Catholicism in the 2000s has done performances of her life 80 Teresa de Jesus 1984 directed by Josefina Molina and starring Concha Velasco is a Spanish made for TV mini series In it Teresa is portrayed as the determined foundress of new carmelite houses while protecting the infant Jesus statue on her many arduous journeys The devotion to the Child Jesus spread quickly in Spain possibly due to her mystical reputation and then to other places including France web 22 Nigel Wingrove s 1989 short film Visions of Ecstasy was based on Teresa of Avila The film features phantasied sexualised scenes of Teresa with the body of Jesus on the cross It is the only work to be refused certification by the British Board of Film Classification BBFC on the grounds of blasphemy web 23 Dzevad Karahasan The Delighted Angel drama about Teresa of Avila and Rabija al Adavija Vienna Salzburg Klagenfurt ARBOS 1995 citation needed Paz Vega stars as Teresa in Teresa el cuerpo de Cristo a 2007 Spanish biopic directed by Ray Loriga 81 Marian Alvarez plays the saint in Teresa a 2015 Spanish television film directed by Jorge Dorado and made for the 500th anniversary of her birth web 24 St Teresa also features prominently in the 2009 Ron Howard film Angels and Demons where the Bernini sculpture The Ecstasy of St Teresa is an important clue in helping Robert Langdon Tom Hanks find an anti matter bomb that is hidden in and set to destroy the Vatican Music Edit Marc Antoine Charpentier composed two motets for the feast of Saint Teresa Flores flores o Gallia for two voices two flutes and continuo H 374 c 1680 and the other for three voices and continuo H 342 in 1686 87 She is a principal character of the opera Four Saints in Three Acts by the composer Virgil Thomson with a libretto by Gertrude Stein 82 83 Saint Teresa is the subject of the song Theresa s Sound World by Sonic Youth off the 1992 album Dirty lyrics by Thurston Moore citation needed 84 Saint Teresa is a track on Joan Osborne s Relish album nominated for a Grammy Award in 1996 web 25 See also EditAsin on mystical analogies in Saint Teresa of Avila and Islam Book of the First Monks Byzantine Discalced Carmelites Carmelite Rule of St Albert Constitutions of the Carmelite Order Mount Carmel Canaanites Secular Order of Discalced Carmelites Saints and levitation Saint Teresa of Avila patron saint archive Spanish Renaissance literature Teresa de Jesus 1984 Spanish language mini series St Teresa s Church Hong Kong Notes Edit At some hour of the night between 4 October and 15 October 1582 the night of the transition in Spain from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar Teresa wrote that it must be a cherub Deben ser los que llaman cherubines but Fr Domingo Banez wrote in the margin that it seemed more like a seraph mas parece de los que se llaman seraphis an identification that most editors have followed Santa Teresa de Avila Libro de su vida Escritos de Santa Teresa For the creation of the work and an analysis of its transgression of religious decorum see Franco Mormando s article Did Bernini s Ecstasy of St Teresa Cross a 17th century Line of Decorum 1 Rowe 2011 p 47 refers to the Castilian Cortes as the Castilian parliament Learn more about what was modified in the modern update of The Interior Castle See The Autobiography Chs 10 22 Catholic Dictionary Prayer of simplicity Meditation replaced by a purer more intimate prayer consisting in a simple regard or loving thought on God or on one of his attributes or on some mystery of the Christian faith Reasoning is put aside and the soul peacefully attends to the operations of the Spirit with sentiments of love 54 Mental prayer oracion mental is not contemplative prayer 57 58 59 References Edit a b Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2018 Church Publishing Inc 17 December 2019 ISBN 978 1 64065 235 4 Lehfeldt 2017 p 217 a b Pope Paul VI 1970a Foa 2015 a b Clissold 1982 Medwick 1999 Expeditions Teresa of Avila amp Lewis 1870 sfn error no target CITEREFTeresa of AvilaLewis1870 help Zimmerman 1912 sfnp error no target CITEREFZimmerman1912 help Pirlo 1997 p 241 a b Herzog Schaff amp Hauck 1908 p 412 Teresa of Avila amp Zimmerman 1997 sfn error no target CITEREFTeresa of AvilaZimmerman1997 help a b The Interior Castle St Teresa of Avila Barton 1982 Rodriguez 2007 a b c d e Kavanaugh amp Rodgriguez 1991 pp 9 27 Salamony 2017 Counsell 2011 p 207 Pope Paul VI 1970b Rowe 2011 p 77 Rowe 2011 Darricau n d Wong n d Santini 1995 Stephen Webre Women in World History A Biographical Encyclopedia Introduction p 16 21 Teresa Introduction p 2 Detweiler amp Jasper 2000 p 48 Teresa of Avila St 1 February 1972 Interior Castle Image p 8 ISBN 0 385 03643 4 Mercer 2017 pp 2539 2555 Eat Pray Love by Elizabeth Gilbert Chapter 46 God Doesn t Want Your Real Estate Beliefnet com Entering the Castle Archived 2009 02 26 at the Wayback Machine Integral Institute Teen Daze Official Website Chapter II Internal Castle Sacred texts com New Life iTunes Store Garriga Espino 2015 pp 35 53 Aumann 1982 p 362 sfnp error no target CITEREFAumann1982 help Zimmerman 2012 sfnp error no target CITEREFZimmerman2012 help Herzog Schaff amp Hauck 1908 p 413 a b Clissold 1982 pp 63 64 Aumann 1982 p 366 sfn error no target CITEREFAumann1982 help Galik Slavomir Tolnaiova Sabina Galikova Spring 2015 A Comparison of Spiritual Traditions in the Context of the Universality of Mysticism PDF Spirituality Studies 1 a b c d e f g h i j k Poulain 1908 a b c d Aumann 1980 a b Thouless 1971 p 125 Merton 2008 p 245 246 Merton 2008 p 241 242 Aumann 1982 sfnp error no target CITEREFAumann1982 help a b Simler 2009 Wynne 1911 Lehodey 1912 p 13 sfnp error no target CITEREFLehodey1912 help Teresa of Avila 2007 p 141 sfnp error no target CITEREFTeresa of Avila2007 help Lehodey 1912 p 5 sfnp error no target CITEREFLehodey1912 help Catholic Dictionary Prayer of simplicity Catholic Dictionary Prayer of simplicity a b Louis J Puhl S J Translation The Spiritual Exercises Ignatian Spirituality Archived from the original on 18 March 2021 Retrieved 7 March 2017 William Johnston The Inner Eye of Love Mysticism and Religion Harper Collins 2004 ISBN 0 8232 1777 9 p 24 Wallenfang amp Wallenfang 2021 p B Mental Prayer or the Prayer of meditation Hollenback 1996 p 535 Wyhe 2008 p 174 Catechism of the Catholic Church 2709 Archived August 1 2016 at the Wayback Machine John Hardon Modern Catholic Dictionary a b c Thomas Dubay Fire Within Ignatius Press 1989 ISBN 0 89870 263 1 chapter 5 Jordan Aumann Christian Spirituality in the Catholic Tradition Sheed amp Ward 1985 ISBN 0 89870 068 X p 247 and p 273 Aumann Christian Spirituality in the Catholic Tradition p 248 Aumann Christian Spirituality in the Catholic Tradition p 276 Teresa of Avila p 177 sfnp error no target CITEREFTeresa of Avila help Teresa of Avila 1921 p 104 Maria de Liguori Alfonso 1999 Prayer of Quiet In Frederick M Jones ed Selected writings Paulist Press p 176 ISBN 0 8091 3771 2 Beauvoir 2011 p 729 Harrison 1995 Lafferty 1999 Klossowski 1998 Maynard 2009 pp 77 80 Moore 1990 p 25 Graham 1999 Findley 1999 Sackville West 2011 Saint Teresa of Avila s Vision of the Dove Peter Paul Rubens in 1612 1614 Jordanova 2012 pp 79 94 Knowles et al 2002 pp 18 34 Teresa el cuerpo de Cristo IMDb Retrieved 9 February 2022 Park 2009 pp 28 44 Tommasini 1998 Hontiveros 2016 Sources EditThis article was originally based on the text in the Schaff Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge Printed sourcesAuclair Marcelle 1950 La vie de Sainte Therese d Avila la Dame Errante de Dieu Paris France Editions du Seuil OCLC 4154440 493 pages French original Auclair Marcelle 1953 Saint Teresa of Avila First English publication New York Pantheon Auclair Marcelle 1988 Saint Teresa of Avila Kathleen Pond trans Reprint of first English publication New York Pantheon 1953 ed Petersham MA St Bede s Publications ISBN 9780932506672 ISBN 0932506674 OCLC 18292197 457 pages Aumann Jordan 1980 Spiritual Theology A amp C Black Balltondre Pla Monica 2012 Extasis y visiones La experiencia contemplativa de Teresa de Avila Pensamiento del Presente Erasmus ISBN 9788492806980 Barton Marcella Biro 1982 Saint Teresa of Avila Did she have Epilepsy The Catholic Historical Review LXVIII 4 Beauvoir Simone de 2011 The Second Sex Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 307 27778 7 Clissold Stephen 1982 St Teresa of Avila 2nd ed London Sheldon ISBN 0 85969 347 3 Counsell Michael 2011 2000 Years of Prayer Hymns Ancient and Modern ISBN 978 1 85311 623 0 Darricau Raymond n d Margaret of the Most Holy Sacrament Margaret Parigot 1619 1648 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 October 2007 Detweiler Robert Jasper David 2000 Teresa of Avila The Interior Castle Religion and literature a reader Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 0 664 25846 8 Findley Timothy 1999 Pilgrim HarperFlamingo Canada ISBN 978 0 00 224258 5 Foa Anna 2 March 2015 Teresa s marrano grandfather Osservatore Romano Archived from the original on 17 November 2017 Garriga Espino Ana 10 December 2015 El desafio editorial de las cartas de Teresa de Jesus PDF Edad de Oro in Spanish Autonomous University of Madrid 35 10 35 53 doi 10 15366 edadoro2015 34 002 ISSN 0212 0429 OCLC 5998749260 Graham Jorie 1999 1987 The End of Beauty New York City HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 880 01616 2 Harrison Kathryn 1995 Poison Random House ISBN 978 0 679 43140 4 Herzog Johann Jakob Schaff Philip Hauck Albert 1908 The new Schaff Herzog encyclopedia of religious knowledge Volume 11 New York Funk and Wagnalls Co Hollenback Jess Byron 1996 Mysticism Experience Response and Empowerment Penn State Press Hontiveros Romeo 14 October 2016 Readings amp Reflections Saturday of the Twenty eighth Week in Ordinary Time amp St Teresa of Avila October 15 2016 pagadiandiocese org Retrieved 15 October 2020 Howell James C 2009 Introducing Christianity Exploring the Bible Faith and Life Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 23297 9 Hsia R Po chia 2004 A Companion to the Reformation World Wiley ISBN 978 0 631 22017 6 Ibanez Pedro 1882 La Vida de la Santa Madre Teresa de Jesus in Spanish Madrid English translation Ibanez Pedro 1888 The Life of S Teresa of Jesus London Jansen Gary 2018 Life Everlasting Catholic Devotions and Mysteries for the Everyday Seeker Penguin ISBN 978 0 525 50386 6 Jordanova Ludmilla 2012 The Look of the Past Visual and Material Evidence in Historical Practice Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 70906 4 Kavanaugh Kieran Rodgriguez Otilio 1991 The Collected Works of Saint John of the Cross 3rd ed ICS Publications ISBN 978 0 935216 14 1 Kirvan John 1996 Let Nothing Disturb You A Journey to the Center of the Soul with Teresa of Avila Ave Maria Press ISBN 978 0 87793 570 4 Klossowski Pierre 1998 The Baphomet Marsilio ISBN 978 1 56886 056 5 Knowles Elizabeth 2009 Oxford Dictionary of Quotations Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 923717 3 Knowles Alison Heartney Eleanor Monk Meredith Montano Linda Ehn Erik September 2002 Art as spiritual practice PAJ A Journal of Performance and Art 24 3 18 34 doi 10 1162 15202810260186620 JSTOR 3246344 S2CID 57572255 Lafferty R A 1999 Fourth Mansions Wildside ISBN 978 1 880448 96 0 Lehfeldt Elizabeth A 2017 Religious Women in Golden Age Spain The Permeable Cloister Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 351 90454 4 Maynard Lee Anna 2009 Beautiful Boredom Idleness and Feminine Self Realization in the Victorian Novel McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 4555 4 McLean Julienne 2003 Towards Mystical Union A Modern Commentary on the Mystical Text The Interior Castle by St Teresa of Avila St Paul s ISBN 978 0 8543 9661 0 Medwick Cathleen 1999 Expeditions Teresa of Avila The Progress of a Soul Knopf ISBN 0 394 54794 2 Mercer Christia 2017 Descartes debt to Teresa of Avila or why we should work on women in the history of philosophy Philosophical Studies 174 10 2539 2555 doi 10 1007 s11098 016 0737 9 S2CID 171117738 Merton Thomas 2008 An Introduction to Christian Mysticism Initiation into the Monastic Tradition 3 Cisterian Publications Moore Kevin Z 1990 The Descent of the Imagination Postromantic Culture in the Later Novels of Thomas Hardy NYU Press ISBN 978 0 8147 5451 1 Pirlo Fr Paolo O 1997 St Teresa of Avila My First Book of Saints Sons of Holy Mary Immaculate Quality Catholic Publications p 241 ISBN 971 91595 4 5 Park Josephine Nock Hee 2009 The Orients of Gertrude Stein College Literature 36 3 28 44 ISSN 0093 3139 JSTOR 20642036 Pope Paul VI 27 September 1970a Proclamazione di Santa Teresa d Avila Dottore della Chiesa Proclamation of Saint Teresa of Avila as a Doctor of the Church La Santa Sede in Italian Retrieved 13 October 2017 Pope Paul VI 3 October 1970b Proclamazione di Santa Caterina da Siena Dottore della Chiesa Proclamation of Saint Catherine of Siena as a Doctor of the Church La Santa Sede in Italian Retrieved 13 October 2017 Poulain Augustin 1908 Contemplation The Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Archived from the original on 13 January 2012 Rodriguez Javier Alvarez 2007 Epilepsy and Mysticism pp 59 69 retrieved 11 April 2019 Rowe Erin Kathleen 2011 Saint and Nation Santiago Teresa of Avila and Plural Identities in Early Modern Spain Penn State University Press ISBN 978 0 271 07815 1 Sackville West Vita 2011 The Eagle and the Dove Pan Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4472 1434 2 Salamony Ryan 2017 The Compassionate Mother of Carmel Teresa of Avila and the Carmelite Model for Twenty First Century Seekers PDF Senior Goucher College hdl 11603 3898 Archived PDF from the original on 22 July 2018 Santini M 1995 The Holy Infant of Prague Prague Martin Simler Jospeh 2009 Catechism of Mental Prayer TAN Books Teresa of Avila 1921 Benedict Zimmerman ed The Interior Castle Translated by The Benedictines of Stanbrook London Thomas Baker Teresa of Avila Zimmerman Benedict 1997 Life of St Teresa of Jesus Tan Books ISBN 978 0 89555 603 5 Teresa of Avila 2007 The Way of Perfection Translated by Benedictines of Stanbrook Cosimo Inc ISBN 978 1 60206 261 0 Thouless Robert Henry 1971 An introduction to the psychology of religion CUP Archive ISBN 0 521 09665 0 Tommasini Anthony 1998 Virgil Thomson Composer on the Aisle New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 9780393318586 Wallenfang Donald Wallenfang Megan 2021 Shoeless Carmelite Spirituality in a Disquieted World Wipf and Stock Publishers Williams Rowan 2004 Teresa of Avila London Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8264 7341 7 Wong Anders n d History of the Infant Jesus of Prague ewtn com Archived from the original on 30 June 2005 Retrieved 13 October 2017 Wyhe Cordula van 2008 Female Monasticism in Early Modern Europe An Interdisciplinary View Ashgate Publishing Ltd Wynne J 1911 Prayer The Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Retrieved 5 December 2022 Zimmerman Benedict St Teresa of Jesus The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 14 New York Robert Appleton Company Web sources Holy Days The Church of England Archived from the original on 1 March 2016 Saints of the Week resurrectionpeople org Archived from the original on 16 May 2019 Retrieved 26 March 2008 Teresa of Avila 1515 1582 Encyclopedia of European Social History Archived from the original on 13 April 2019 Retrieved 13 April 2019 First female Doctor of the Church to be honored this week Catholic News Agency 11 October 2009 St Teresa of Avila Catholic News Agency Archived from the original on 4 August 2017 Retrieved 15 October 2012 Discalced Carmelite History OCD General House 2 July 2003 Archived from the original on 27 June 2015 Retrieved 15 October 2020 The Calendar The Church of England Retrieved 27 March 2021 Saint Therese of the Child Jesus of the Holy Face Saint Therese of Lisieux A Gateway Retrieved 15 October 2020 History of the Infant Jesus of Prague Archived from the original on 21 November 2011 Retrieved 14 January 2012 Infant of Prague Devotions amp Prayers 29 September 2009 Retrieved 13 October 2017 Infant Jesus of Prague CatholicSaints Info 14 February 2009 Retrieved 13 October 2017 She Thinks Therefore I Am Columbia Magazine Fall 2017 Retrieved 27 November 2018 Nada te turbe Canterbury Dictionary of Hymnology Retrieved 26 January 2021 a b c d Catholic Strength The Seven Mansions a b c d St Teresa s Nine Grades of Prayer Leen Edward Progress Through Mental Prayer Jordan Aumann Grade 6 Prayer of the Quiet Barbara Mujica Washington Independent Review of Books Retrieved 30 January 2018 St Therese of Avila by Peter Paul Rubens Museum of Art History Bernini s Ecstasy of St Teresa History and Appreciation of Art II Lumen Retrieved 28 February 2018 St Teresa of Avila On Love The Fra Angelico Institute for Sacred Art 15 October 2012 Retrieved 8 November 2018 Teresa de Jesus at IMDb Visions of Ecstasy gets UK rating after 23 year ban BBC News 31 January 2012 Retrieved 31 January 2012 Teresa San Sebastian Film Festival 2015 Retrieved 30 January 2020 Joan Osborne Relish austriancharts at Hung Medien Further reading EditCarolyn A Greene Castles in the Sand fiction with cited sources about Teresa of Avila Lighthouse Trails Publishing 2009 ISBN 978 0 9791315 4 7 Jean Abiven 15 Days of Prayer with Saint Teresa of Avila New City Press 2011 ISBN 978 1 56548 366 8 Gould Levine Linda Engelson Marson Ellen Feiman Waldman Gloria eds 1993 Spanish Women Writers A Bio Bibliographical Source Book Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 31326 823 6 Barbara Mujica Teresa de Avila Lettered Woman Nashville Vanderbilt University Press 2009 E Rhodes Teresa de Jesus s Book and the Reform of the Religious Man in Sixteenth Century Spain in Laurence Lux Sterritt and Carmen Mangion eds Gender Catholicism and Spirituality Women and the Roman Catholic Church in Britain and Europe 1200 1900 Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan 2011 John Thomas Ecstasy art amp the body St Teresa of Avila s Transverberation and its depiction in the sculpture of Gianlorenzo Bernini in John Thomas Happiness Truth amp Holy Images Essays of Popular Theology and Religion amp Art Wolverhampton Twin Books 2019 pp 12 16 John Thomas Architectural image and via mystica St Teresa s Las Moradas in John Thomas Happiness Truth amp Holy Images Essays of Popular Theology and Religion amp Art Wolverhampton Twin Books 2019 pp 39 48 Du Boulay Shirley 2004 Teresa of Avila An Extraordinary Life Katonah New York BlueBridge ISBN 978 0 974 24052 7 External links EditTeresa of Avila at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Works of St Teresa of Avila Online Christian Classics Ethereal Library Teresa 500 Videos of a conference held at Roehampton University in 2015 on the 500th anniversary of Teresa s birth St Teresa Virgin Butler s Lives of the Saints Founder Statue in St Peter s Basilica Biography Online Saint Teresa of Avila Patron Saints Saint Teresa of Avila Books written by Saint Teresa of Avila including Saint John of the Cross Works by Teresa of Avila at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Teresa of Avila at Internet Archive Works by Teresa of Avila at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Basilica of Saint Teresa in Alba de Tormes Archived 28 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish Alba de Tormes sepulcro de Santa Teresa Tomb of Saint Teresa on YouTube in Spanish Life of St Teresa of Jesus of The Order of Our Lady of Carmel Way of Perfection Interior Castle or The Mansions Convent of St Teresa in Avila Poems of Saint Teresa Santa Teresa an Appreciation 1900 by Alexander Whyte from Project Gutenberg Colonnade Statue St Peter s Square Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Teresa of Avila amp oldid 1144457145, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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